The question is incomplete. The correct question is as following:
__________ studied the role of RNA in protein synthesis, specifically in the bacteria E. coli.
Answer:
Marshall Nirenberg and Heinrich Matthaei
Explanation:
Marshall Nirenberg and Heinrich Matthaei are two biochemist and geneticist who studied the functional importance of RNA in the process of translation (protein synthesis) experimentally in E.Coli.
Nirenberg and Matthaei discovered the first codon out of 64 codons present in RNA and they successfully performed translation (protein synthesis) in E.coli in a test tube. They decoded the first codon UUU (phenylalanine) by using synthetic RNA having only uracil nucleotides in a E.Coli and later they decoded further codons.
So, the correct answer is Marshall Nirenberg and Heinrich Matthaei.
When a doctor observes the symptom of a patient and tells
that he or she is likely having a flu, the reasoning she or he used is likely
from the effect to cause. The reasoning from effect to cause is having to check
on the cause in order to produce or come out with the effect in which the
symptoms is the cause of the flu, in which the flu is the effect.
Butterflies undergo complete metamorphosis, and their life cycle contains 4 stages.
First, they are born as an egg.
Then, they are hatched as a larva. They now eat flowers and leaves and will molt constantly.
Next, they become a chrysalis, or a pupa. This is a resting stage.
Then is the long awaited adult stage, where butterflies take the form of the beloved, beautiful, winged insects we've come to admire. They no long grow and will now reproduce and repeat the cycle.
Hope this helps! Have a great day :)
(whoo, this took a while to write!)
Answer: An object with twice the mass of another object will weigh twice as much is the statement accurately describes the relationship between mass and weight.
Hope it helps you if not sorry
Explanation: A.Mass is an objects weight multiplied by the amount of gravitational force acting upon the object
Answer:
D. That is a D.N.A Molecule, which stores your gene's/ info